PROLOTHERAPY IS A NON-SURGICAL OPTION FOR SPORTS INJURY! With Prolotherapy, you can
keep training, get back in the game/event quickly, no down time, no long rehab required, alternative to the much-feared often career-ending surgeries...
Incomplete Healing of the Ligament and Tendon
Most athletic injuries involve strains and sprains to tendons and ligaments,
respectively. A tendon attaches a muscle to the bone and involves movement
of the joint. A ligament connects two bones and is involved in the stability
of the joint. A strain is defined as a stretched or injured tendon. A sprain
is a stretched or injured ligament. Once a body structure is injured, the
immune system is stimulated to repair the injured area. Because ligaments
and tendons generally have a poor blood supply, incomplete healing is common
after injury. (Browner, B. Skeletal Trauma. Philadelphia, PA: W.B. Saunders
Company, 1992, 1:87-88.; Deese, J. Compressive neuropathies of the lower
extremity. The Journal of Musculoskeletal Medicine. November 1988, p. 68-91.)
This
incomplete healing results in decreased strength of the area. The ligaments
and tendons are normally taut, strong bands of fibrous or connective tissue
but, because of injury, become relaxed and weak. The injured ligament or
tendon then becomes the source of chronic pain and weakness for the athlete.
Ligaments
and tendons are also more prone to injury because of the natural aging
process. The water content in our joints and connective tissues (ligaments
and tendons) decreases with age, the articular cartilage (which lines the
joints) gets brittle and shrinks.
Cartilage is so vital, especially in weight-bearing
joints like the knee, because it causes an even force to be generated at
the underlying bone. It also causes the force generated on the bone to
be less. When cartilage is degenerated, the force to the bone is greater
and uneven and arthritis develops. Since cartilage decreases the force
inside the joint, it becomes obvious that as cartilage deteriorates as
we age, other structures are going to have to bear this force. Since tendons
move the joints and ligaments stabilize the joints, it is primarily these
soft tissue structures that are involved. Because ligaments stabilize the
joints, a weakening of these structures causes a further force to the bones
of the joints. This increased force hastens the arthritic process.
The greatest
stresses to the ligaments and tendons are where they attach to the bone,
the fibro-osseous junction. The most sensitive structures that produce
pain, according to Daniel Kayfetz, M.D., are the periosteum (covering of
the bone) and the ligaments. It is important to note that in the scale
of pain sensitivity (which part of the body hurts more when injured), Dr.
Kayfetz notes that the periosteum ranks first, followed by ligaments, tendons,
fascia (the connective tissue that surrounds muscle), and finally muscle.
(Kayfetz, D. Occipital-cervical (whiplash) Injuries treated by Prolotherapy.
Medical Trial Technique Quarterly, June, 1963, p. 9-29.)
Articular cartilage
contains no sensory nerve endings. If you are told that your cartilage
is the cause of your pain, that is not possible and is, actually, quite
ridiculous. The cartilage cannot hurt because there are no sensory nerves
to sense pain located in the cartilage. If there is cartilage damage, what
hurts? The ligaments are typically the structures that hurt. Ligaments
are weakest where they attach to bone. The periosteum is the most sensitive
area to pain and the ligaments second. It is now easy to understand why
this area hurts so much. This is where the Prolotherapy injections occur
and thus eliminate the chronic pain of many conditions including arthritis,
mechanical low back pain, Degenerative Disc Disease, cartilage injury,
and, of course, sports injuries.
Prolotherapy works
by stimulating the body's healing system, a process called inflammation.
The technique involves the injection of various solutions that cause
a mild inflammatory response that "turns on" the healing
process. The growth of new ligament and tendon tissue is then stimulated.
These new ligaments and tendons should not be confused with scar
tissue, which is a chaotic matrix of collagen. The ligaments and
tendons produced after Prolotherapy, appear much the same as normal
tissues, except that they are thicker, stronger, and contain fibers
of varying thickness, testifying to the new and ongoing creation
of collagen tissue.
What is a soft tissue injury
and can Prolotherapy help it?
Dr. Ross Hauser of Caring Medical in Oak Park,
Illinois answers the question of how Prolotherapy can help
to heal soft tissue injuries. If you are interested in becoming
a Prolotherapy patient and have questions about your case,
please visit www.caringmedical.com.
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The
information on this website is presented as information only and not a
self-help guide. Never alter or change your health management or begin
any new health plans without first consulting your personal health care
provider. Some statements on this site regarding the value of nutritional
supplements have not been evaluated by the FDA.
Prolotherapy may not be effective for every individual and there are risks involved,
these risks should be discussed with your physician. Results achieved
with some may not be typical of all. Please consult a physician.
There
is no known cure for arthritis. Prolotherapy and nutritional supplements
can help alleviate, reverse, or end arthritic pain by treating an underlying
cause that contributes to degenerative disease, ligament laxity. Strengthening
ligaments and other connective tissue can help prevent bone on bone arthritis
from developing.